Lynden Miller Speaks at Woodlawn!

Lynden B. Miller Author’s Talk, “Parks, Plants, and People: Beautifying the Urban Landscape

Date/Time: Sunday, September 12, 1:00 p.m.

Reservations (recommended): Contact Brian Sahd, Executive Director, Friends of The Woodlawn Cemetery, (718) 920-1470, [email protected]

 Cost: $10 per person, $5 for seniors and students, children under 6 are free

 Location: Woolworth Chapel, just inside the Jerome Avenue entrance (near Bainbridge Avenue, across the street from the last stop on the #4 train), The Woodlawn Cemetery, Webster Avenue and E. 233rd St., Bronx, NY 10470

 Directions: The Woodlawn Cemetery is the last stop on the IRT #4 train. The cemetery is also accessible from the Metro North Railroad Harlem Line (Woodlawn Station). For those traveling by car, Woodlawn can be reached from the E. 233rd St. exit off the Major Deegan (#13) and the Bronx River Parkway (#10).

 About the Author:

 Lynden B. Miller is a public garden designer in New York City and the Director of The Conservatory Garden in Central Park, which she rescued and restored beginning in l982. Based on her belief that good public open spaces can change city life, she has designed many other gardens and parks in all five boroughs since that time. 

 Her work in New York City includes gardens for Bryant Park, The New York Botanical Garden, Wagner Park in Battery Park City, Madison Square Park, and, most recently, the British Garden in Hanover Square. She has designed landscape improvements to the campuses at Columbia, Stony Brook on Long Island, Princeton, and Hunter College and plantings for the garden at the Museum of Modern Art. She is part of a team designing landscape and gardens for the United States Supreme Court, and her new garden for the Hudson River Park Trust opened to the public in Spring 2010.  She is presently reinvigorating the Heather Garden in Fort Tryon Park.

 Mrs. Miller was trained as a painter and studied horticulture at The New York Botanical Garden before beginning her public career. She is on the Board of Trustees of the Central Park Conservancy, New Yorkers for Parks, and the New York Botanical Garden.

 In October 1999, Smith College honored Mrs. Miller, describing her as one “who uses the beauty and enchantment of public gardens to instill new pride in communities and change the personal and public experience of urban life.”

Posted Under: The Politics of Preservation, Uncategorized

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